Ferdynand Goetel

Ferdynand Goetel, (born May 15, 1890, Sucha Beskidzka, Austria-Hungary [now in Poland]—died November 24, 1960, London, England), Polish novelist and essayist noted primarily for his memoirs and his novels about exotic countries.

Goetel started writing after World War I, when he returned to Poland from Russian Turkestan. As a citizen of the Austrian-ruled part of Poland, he had been interned there as an Austrian subject. In 1924 he published Przez płonący Wschód (“Across the Blazing East”), a colourful recollection of his own adventures in Russia during the 1917 revolution and the civil war. His collections of short stories Pątnik Karapeta (1923; “Karapeta the Pilgrim”) and Ludzkość (1925; “Mankind”) are based on his observations of the Turkic peoples he had encountered. Z dnia na dzień (1926; From Day to Day) is a novel interesting for its use of the diary form within the main narrative as a means of exploring character.

In Goetel’s collection of essays Pod znakiem faszyzmu (1939; “Under the Banner of Fascism”), he expressed sympathy with the Fascist movement in Italy. During the German occupation of Poland, Goetel received permission from the underground Polish authorities to take part in the German-organized exhumation of bodies of Polish officers murdered by Soviet internal security troops (NKVD) at the Katyń Forest. After the war, wanted by the communist regime for alleged collaboration with the Germans, he left Poland illegally in 1946 and settled in England, where he published his wartime memoirs, Czasy wojny (1955; “The Time of the War”), and reminiscences of his younger years, Patrząc wstecz (1966; “Looking Back”).